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Antonino Cattaneo

Researcher at International School for Advanced Studies

Publications -  281
Citations -  12795

Antonino Cattaneo is an academic researcher from International School for Advanced Studies. The author has contributed to research in topics: Nerve growth factor & Neurotrophin. The author has an hindex of 59, co-authored 264 publications receiving 11828 citations. Previous affiliations of Antonino Cattaneo include International Centre for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology & Novartis.

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Resveratrol Prolongs Lifespan and Retards the Onset of Age-Related Markers in a Short-Lived Vertebrate

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that food supplementation with resveratrol prolongs lifespan and retards the expression of age-dependent traits in a short-lived vertebrate.
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Transgenic plants expressing a functional single-chain Fv antibody are specifically protected from virus attack

TL;DR: Evidence is presented that constitutive expression in transgenic plants of a scFv antibody, directed against the plant icosahedral tombusvirus artichoke mottled crinkle virus, causes reduction of infection incidence and delay in symptom development.
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Activity-Dependent Dendritic Targeting of BDNF and TrkB mRNAs in Hippocampal Neurons

TL;DR: The activity-dependent modulation of mRNA targeting and protein accumulation in the dendrites may provide a mechanism for achieving a selective local regulation of the activity of neurotrophins and their receptors, close to their sites of action.
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An integrated vector system for the eukaryotic expression of antibodies or their fragments after selection from phage display libraries

TL;DR: A set of mammalian expression vectors which permit facile and rapid cloning of antibody genes for both transient and stable expression in mammalian cells and all the important elements in the vectors are flanked by unique restriction sites, allowing simple substitution of elements.
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Intranasal administration of nerve growth factor (NGF) rescues recognition memory deficits in AD11 anti-NGF transgenic mice

TL;DR: The Alzheimer-like neurodegeneration in AD11 mice is linked to progressive behavioral deficits in visual recognition memory and spatial memory starting from 4 months of age, and this route of administration provides a promising way to deliver NGF to the brain in a therapeutic perspective.